Book Cover
E-book
Author Jay, Stewart

Title Most humble servants : the advisory role of early judges / Stewart Jay
Published New Haven : Yale University Press, [1997]
©1997

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Description 1 online resource (x, 302 pages)
Contents 1. The Advisory Role of Judges in Great Britain Through the Eighteenth Century -- 2. The Advisory Role of American Judges Prior to 1787 -- 3. The Advisory Role of Judges During the Formation of the U.S. Constitution -- 4. The Advisory Role of Judges During the Washington Administration -- 5. Declining Washington's Request: The Events of 1793 -- 6. Explaining the Supreme Court's Refusal to Assist the Washington Administration -- App. Letter from the Justices of the Supreme Court to President George Washington
Summary It has long been assumed that throughout the history of the United States, the role of judges was limited to adjudicating cases and did not include performing other official functions for the executive and legislative branches of government. This book challenges that assumption, investigating the variety of duties judges performed until the end of the eighteenth century and exploring why a new separation of powers developed only after 1793
Stewart Jay shows that early judges in both the United States and Great Britain provided extrajudicial advisory opinions to the executive, took administrative assignments, assisted in legislative drafting, and even held offices in other branches of government. In 1793, however, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to answer the Washington administration's request for legal advice on American treaty relations with France. Jay argues that if we take into consideration late eighteenth-century theories of separation of powers and the probable intent of the Framers of the Constitution, no significant constitutional barriers prevented the Court from answering Washington's questions. The actual reasons for the Court's refusal were related to the practical consequences that would result if the Justices issued a formal advisory opinion during a foreign policy crisis. Similarly, says Jay, British judges of the same period also abandoned advisory opinions owing to pragmatic concerns
Jay thus offers a revisionary account of the 1793 political-legal crisis, a landmark event in the formation of the American judiciary and the doctrine of separation of powers
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Advisory opinions -- United States -- History
Judicial opinions -- United States -- History
Advisory opinions -- Great Britain -- History
Judicial opinions -- Great Britain -- History
LAW -- Legal History.
Advisory opinions
Judicial opinions
Politischer Berater
Geschichte
Richter
Great Britain
United States
USA
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780300146561
0300146566